Soil fungi

> ==========
> bionet/mycology #2752, from mik_daha at luecology.ecol.lu.sexx, 1751
chars, Thu 24 Apr 1997 08:20:06 -0
> Comment to 2698.
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> Article: 4846 of bionet.mycology
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> From: David Hagerberg <mik_daha at luecology.ecol.lu.sexx>
> Newsgroups: bionet.mycology
> Subject: Re: Soil fungi
> Date: Thu, 24 Apr 1997 08:20:06 -0700
> Organization: Dep Microbial Ecology
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>> K N and P J Harris wrote:
> >
> > > ==========
>> > > From: David Hagerberg <mik_daha at luecology.ecol.lu.sexx>
> > >
> > > I'm working with different fungi associated with the rhizosphere.
I
> > want
> > > to know wether anybody has any suggestion how to see or detect
their
> > > status and actions in the soil.
> > >
> > > Best Regards!
> > There are saprophytes, soil borne plant pathogens and the group you
> > simply must cover which are the mycorrhizae. These form symbiotic
> > associations with MOST plants and can be vital to the survival of
the
> > plant.
> >
> > Any study of plants which ignores the mycorrhizae is a study of an
> > artifact. (A slogan lifted from the BEG organisation at the
University
> > of Kent at Canterbury, U.K. with which I completely agree).
> > Peter Harris,
> > Department of Soil Science,
> > The University of Reading, U.K.
> > AKA <P.J.Harris at reading.ac.uk>
> > Thank you for your attention!
>> Now how do you study mycorrhizae directly in the soil?
>> Best Regards!
The simple answer to that is "with great difficulty". The hyphae are
fairly fragile although they do tend to be characteristic and easier to
spot than most hyphae. It is possible (though not very precise) to carry
out total fungal length estimates in soils with and without a
mycorrhizal plant. It suggests that quite a lot of hyphae seen in
planted soils (the only soils really worth investigating as a soil
without a plant in it is analogous to a car without fuel) are
mycorrhizal.
The easy thing to do is to extract spores and categorise them into
morphotypes if not down to species level.
Peter Haris